Safe for Aliso Canyon Gas Facility to Reopen

LOS ANGELES – Following months of rigorous inspection and analysis of wells at the Aliso Canyon natural gas storage facility – and the implementation of multiple new safety protocols – state engineering and safety enforcement experts have concluded the facility is safe to operate and can reopen at a greatly reduced capacity in order to protect public safety and prevent an energy shortage in Southern California.

Under Senate Bill 380 (SB 380) the Division of Oil, Gas and Geothermal Resources (DOGGR) and the California Public Utilities Commission (CPUC) were required to concur that the facility is safe before gas injection could resume.

For months starting in 2015, roughly 8,000 families in and around the northwest San Fernando Valley neighborhood were driven from their homes, with many complaining of health issues that included cancer, nausea and nosebleeds.

The blowout, which at its peak more than doubled the methane emissions of the entire Los Angeles Basin, took more than four months to plug.

The rigorous testing process for the facility was developed in close coordination with nationally recognized experts from Lawrence Berkeley, Lawrence Livermore and Sandia National Labs.

DOGGR suspended the injection of natural gas at the Aliso Canyon storage facility after a major leak was discovered in October 2015. The leak was permanently sealed four months later. DOGGR also ordered a comprehensive safety review in which each of the 114 wells in the facility either had to pass a battery of tests to potentially be eligible to resume gas injection or be taken out of operation and isolated from the reservoir. This testing protocol – approved by independent national laboratories –

This testing protocol – approved by independent national laboratories included:

• Lowering sensors into the well to measure temperature and verify the integrity of the well
• Lowering an acoustic sensor to confirm no gas was leaking
• Extensive measurements of the well casing walls
• A sonic test to confirm adherence between cement and the external casing of the well
• A multi-arm caliper inspection to verify the casing’s ability to withstand pressure
• A pressure test to confirm the well remains sound when the pressure is 115 percent its maximum
operating pressure.

In addition to all the testing requirements, approximately 60 percent of the wells have now been taken out of operation and isolated from the facility. All the remaining wells that passed the stringent battery of tests were subject to stringent new retrofit and inspection requirements:

• Active wells are now equipped with real-time pressure monitors.
• The company must conduct routine aerial monitoring for the presence of any methane.
• Well heads are inspected daily using infrared and other leak-detecting technology.
• All of the wells used for injection and production have new steel tubing and new seals (known as
packers) inside the wellbore.
• The gas pressure in the storage reservoir has been reduced, from 3,600 PSI to 2,926 PSI.
• Another layer of protection ensures that gas flows only through an inner steel pipe. This allows the outer casing to serve as a secondary safety barrier.

While these aggressive new safety protocols take effect, the independent investigation into the cause of the Aliso Canyon leak continues. SoCalGas has prepared a risk management plan that identifies prevention and mitigation steps for potential hazards, and a supplemental analysis of the seismic risk to the facility is in process.

Additionally, the CPUC continues to a hold a proceeding that will decide the future of the facility.